The Internet Lives in a Huge Hotel in Manhattan - Exclusive Stills !!!

Started by Kalyan, Nov 13, 2015, 02:46 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

Kalyan

The Internet Lives in a Huge Hotel in Manhattan


Fiber optic cables form a dense nest around a technician - PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15690 type=full]

Biometric mantrap snares (double locking doors) are common security protections - PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15701 type=full]

Fiber optic cables enter and exit carrier hotels through underground vaults. Some of these cables are running local connections, others are on their way to cross the Atlantic - PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15705 type=full]

Raised floors are commonly used to manage wiring and channel cool air ducts directly to server arrays-  PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15706 type=full]

New, higher capacity fiber optic cables are fitted onto a rack, replacing slower copper cabling - PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15707 type=full]

20-cylinder diesel engines kick on to keep systems running if primary utilities fail - PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15708 type=full]

Electrical switches transfer and distribute power. PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15709 type=full]

Server racks inside a peering exchange, where large networks exchange traffic with others when a mutual benefit exists. PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15710 type=full]

Ceiling tiles removed for maintenance reveal various conduits–some fiber cabling and some utility lines. PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15711 type=full]

A customer's servers are installed in vacant space on a rack. PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15691 type=full]

A network operations center where a facility is monitored and controlled.  PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15692 type=full]

An electrical substation transforms incoming voltage and distributes power through a building. PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15693 type=full]

Techs are on site 24/7 to diagnose and fix issues for clients without immediate access to their equipment. PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15694 type=full]

Technical drawings on a whiteboard. PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15695 type=full]

A technician works on a server.  PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15696 type=full]

Conduit carrying lines of power, fiber, and control cables enters a room where backup power systems are connected. PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15697 type=full]

Yellow cables indicate fiber optic lines. The grey wires are lower bandwidth copper cables. PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15698 type=full]

In a sub basement, redundant utility equipment and diesel fuel are stored for disaster recovery.  PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15699 type=full]

Construction begins on newly leased floor space. PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15700 type=full]

Security guards in the lobby of 60 Hudson Street, originally built as Western Union's headquarters in 1930. PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15702 type=full]

Build out begins on a floor that will become colocated space. PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15703 type=full]

Fans move warm exhaust air of the roof at 60 Hudson Street. PETER GARRITANO
[smg id=15704 type=full]




THERE IS NO shortage of cool stuff to see on the Internet, but the Internet itself—the networks and servers and cables tying it all together—is pretty mundane. Peter Garritano discovered as much when he went behind the scenes at some of New York's big Internet hubs to see how it all works.

Garritano always knew the Internet is as much a place as it is a thing, one where vast networks in frigid rooms move enormous amounts of data around the world. But he didn't have a real understanding of how all that info moves from one place to another, and he wanted to find out. He's spent the last few months doing just that, shooting at five "carrier hotels" where many networks converge to form a single, larger network. That's why they called it the Internet. It allows an unlimited number of different networks to come together as one.

At a carrier hotel, AT&T's network can hook up with Verizon's network. Verizon's network can connect with Google's network. And so on. Mostly, it's a place for connecting big Internet service providers like AT&T and Verizon—the organizations that give homes and business their Internet connections—but increasingly, the companies that run massive applications over the Internet—like Google and Microsoft—are starting to run their own networks as well.

Meanwhile, all sort of other companies that use the Internet can set up machines inside these facilities. That's how they get their websites and other software to you and a world of businesses.

Getting into these wired hotels wasn't easy. Garritano pinged tech journalists for leads and spent weeks sending emails and making calls to arrange meetings. Two of the five carrier hotels in New York didn't want to be named, but the other three are run by outfits like Telx and Zayo. They provide a direct connection to Internet providers and businesses including Time Warner Cable and Hewlett-Packard. Security is drum-tight, with security guards, security cameras, biometric security checkpoints, and even man traps.

Get past all that, though, and the Internet is pretty boring: miles and miles of cables linking row after row of servers cooled by enormous HVAC systems. It's tough to wrap your head around the idea that something so small as a fiber optic cable can move so much data so quickly. "It's so massive but the individual cables themselves are no the thicker than your phone charger. In that sense, without appreciating the context of the space it can be kind of visually anticlimactic," Garritano says.

At least one escort accompanied Garritano at all times. Sometimes they let him linger as long as he liked, but other times they whisked him through so quickly he had to shoot from the hip—literally. On those instances where he had plenty of time, Garritano used a medium format film camera. He favored a DSLR on those occasions when he shot on the fly.

Garritano suspects he is hardly alone in having never given the Internet much thought. He took it for granted, but has come to appreciate it. He hopes others do, too. "On a basic level, I hope this series can help communicate that reality and illustrate the various systems required for the Internet to function," he says. "That is, the massive amounts of power required, the cooling systems, the enormously complex system of cable connections, and of course, the people who design and maintain these systems."


Courtesy: wired